Basically he says that it is atmospheric pressure that controls the temperature on every planet, not the distance from the sun, or the amount of Carbondioxide in the atmosphere. What do you think guys?

Basically he says that it is atmospheric pressure that controls the temperature on every planet, not the distance from the sun, or the amount of Carbondioxide in the atmosphere. What do you think guys?

The RS2 research has demonstrated that most physical phenomenon is based on pressure, not force. For example, electric current in a wire acts more like the water pressure in your pipes--it is not based on flow, unless you get a leak.

So I would concur that the radical changes in our environment are also pressure based--makes a lot more sense, because whenever you increase pressure somewhere, it decreases somewhere else, as the volume of air is relatively constant. Hotter desert regions (higher pressure) = colder Siberian regions (lower pressure).

It is a known fact in chemistry that temperature increases with pressure--as long as the volume remains the same. (That's why you put a lid on a pot to make water boil faster.)

The stuff on the planets... just speculation. After all, NASA = Never A Straight Answer.